The Washington Times
published my piece on Russian assassins.
In Ian Fleming’s 1957
thriller “From Russia With Love,” his finest novel in my view, a psychopath
assassin named Donovan “Red” Grant is sent by Soviet intelligence to the West
to kill British operative James Bond.
The late Mr. Fleming, a naval
intelligence officer during WWII and a journalist who covered espionage cases
both before and after the war, acknowledged that his thriller plots were
fantastic, but yet, he added, that they were often based on the real world of
intelligence. He said that on occasion a news story would “lift a corner of the
veil” and reveal the real world of spies, assassins and commandos.
For example, Mr. Fleming
noted the case of Russian assassin Capt. Nikoly Khokhlov, who was ordered to
murder a Russian dissident in Germany in 1954. Khokhlov was equipped with an
electrically operated gun fitted with a silencer and concealed in a gold
cigarette case. The gun fired bullets tipped in cyanide, which were designed to
lead a pathologist to rule the cause of death to be heart failure.
While today the United
Kingdom, the U.S. and other Western nations condemn Russia for the attempted
murder of former Russian intelligence officer Sergei Skripal, the brazen
poisoning and attempted murder of him and his daughter in the United Kingdom
was by no means the first of its kind.
The Russians in the bad old
days of the Soviet Union sent forth a good number of assassins to the West to
murder Soviet “enemies of the state.” The Russian government under Vladimir Putin,
himself a former KGB officer, appears to be carrying on the old tradition.
“It has long been known that
the Soviet state security service (currently the KGB) resorts to abduction and
murder to combat what are considered to be actual or potential threats to the
Soviet regime,” stated a 1964 CIA report that was declassified in 1993.
“These techniques, frequently designated as
‘executive action’ and known within the KGB as ‘liquid affairs’ (Mokryye Dela),
can be and are employed abroad as well as within the borders of the USSR. They
have been used against Soviet citizens, Soviet emigres, and even foreign
nationals. A list of those who have fallen victim to such action over the years
would be a very long one and would include even the co-founder of the Soviet
state, Leon Trotsky. Several well-known Soviet assassination operations which
have occurred since the rise of Khrushchev attest to the fact that the present
leadership of the USSR still employs this method of dealing with its enemies.”
You can read the rest of the
piece via the below link:
Note: The top photo is of Vladimir Putin. The next photo shows an array of poison guns used by Russian assassins. The third photo is of Ian Fleming. The last photo is the cover of a paperback copy of Ian Fleming's From Russia With Love novel after the release of the film based on Fleming's novel, starring Sean Connery as James Bond.
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